Monday, Nov. 10, 1952 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Varsity Beats Frosh, 53-47 In Season's First Cage Game A battling freshman team pushed Coach Phog Allen's rebuilt NCAA championship club all the way before dropping a 53-47 decision in the annual Freshman-Varsity game Friday night. Except for a second quarter Varsity spree which netted 20 points, the fresh squad fought the defending champions on even terms and outscored them in the first and last quarters. Bill Braindam, 6-foot 3 inch all-state selection from Newton led the yearlings with six field goals and two free throws for a 14 point total. Other frush players who were impressive were Len Martin, Joe Wagoner, Dick Diers, Dallas Dobbs, and Jim Toft. Captain Dean Kelley, only starter from the 1952 national championship team, scored 10 points for the winners but yielded scoring honors to B. H. Born, Medicine Lodge junior, who hit seven field goals and two free throws for 16 points. The varsity took the lead in the first quarter on goals by Born and Kelley, but the frosh, paced by Brainard, moved out into a 14-6 lead before the winners cut the margin to 14-10 at the quarter. The varsity wiped out the frush lead in the second quarter to take an 11 point advantage which was reduced to seven at the half on three set shots by Wagoner. The box score: Varsity (S3) G F T F Davenport, f 0 1 2 Alberts, f 2 0 2 Wolfe, f 1 0 1 Squires, f 3 0 1 Buller, f 0 1 1 Johnson, f 0 0 0 Franklin, f 0 0 1 Born, c 7 2 4 Guess, c 0 0 1 Nicholson, c 0 1 0 Whitney, c 0 0 1 Dye, g 0 0 1 Heitholt, g 4 0 0 Engel, g 0 0 1 A. K'eeley, g 0 0 1 D. Kelley, g 5 0 1 Smith, g 0 0 3 Padgett, g 0 2 1 Deckert, g 1 0 0 Twinkle 23 7 22 Freshmen (47) G FTF F Brainard, f 6 2 0 McEloy, f, c 0 1 0 Martin, f 3 0 3 Coffman, c 0 3 3 Toft, c 1 3 3 Diers, c 2 1 1 Maguire, g 0 1 1 Cox, g 0 0 0 Buchanan, g 1 0 2 Dobbs, g 1 0 1 Mathews, g 0 0 1 Amons, g 0 0 1 Robinson, g 0 0 1 Crisler, g 0 0 0 Wagoner, g 3 2 1 Trombl, 17 13 18 Scoring by Quarters | Seating by | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Varsity | 10 | 20 | 12 | 11 | 53 | | Fresh | 14 | 9 | 10 | 14 | 47 | Player Socks Heckling Fan Iowa City, Ia. — (U.P.)—Illinois and Iowa football coaches asked fans to forget a disturbance at the end of the Illinois-Iowa game here Saturday. Illinois-Poison Coaches Forrest Evahesvski of Iowa and Ray Eliot of Illinois yesterday called the incident regrettable in which Richard Wolfe, an Iowa sophomore from Donnellson, Ia, was hit by an Illinois player. Doctors at university hospital said Wolfe suffered multiple fractures of the jaw. An eye-witness said Wolfe heckled the team as it trotted off the field. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Mass. VARSITY STOPPED AGAIN—as Len Martin, one of the fighting frosh that fought the KU varsity cagers to a standstill last Friday evening, steals the ball from Rich Young, left, as B. H. Born, right, reaches in a futile attempt to regain possession. The frosh led in scoring much of the game and brought sympathetic cheers from the crowd when they narrowed a 10-pt, varsity lead in the final quarter to three points before finally bowing. 53-47. Santee Sets Course Mark In 12-26 Win Over Sooners with the meet. The expected dual between Santee and Oklahoma's Bruce Drummond did not materialize as Drummond placed third, a good 100 yards behind second-place Art Dallzell of Kansas. Lanky Wes Santee, undefeated in four meets this season, led the Kansas Jayhawkers to their 22nd straight cross-country victory Saturday, setting a new course record in the 12-23 victory over Oklahoma, low score winning. Santee finished by himself as he beat Dalzell by more than 100 yards, but he didn't let up and finished with a torrid stretch drive that delighted the 25,000 fans who were already in Memorial stadium for the Kansas-Nebraska football game. Santee, NCAA 5,000-meter king, covered the three-mile hill-and-dale course in 15.02.5, eclipsing his own record of 15.14.3 set in the Oklahoma A&M dual meet earlier this season. Only one Sooner placed in the top five as the KU harriers ran off KU will play host to the Big Seven conference cross-country meet Sat- By DON NIELSEN Kansan Sports Editor The new sports staff takes over this week to the tune of "Hearts and Flowers." and Flowers. Though we feel like crying along with the team after losing a heartbreaker like the 14-13 tumble to Nebraska, we also feel like snarling when we hear all the moans and shrieks of the armchair quarterbacks and second-guessers who swear that they could have done better with a Ladies Aid bandage rolling club. For example, no sooner does a team get upset than some of the alums and outraged student body get up in arms and declare that the only honorable thing to do is to fire the coach or cancel the rest of the season and go into mourning. Actually, Kansas is no less of a champion team in our eyes because of the defeat. They played hard under a lot of handicaps, such as the weather and a full load of injuries. The fact that the high power scoring combination of Robertson and Hoag was out of operation by reason of Hoag's injuries doesn't seem to affect the arguments of the post-game critics. However, since we were included in the bunch that was so haughtily critical after the game, we don't have a lot of room to criticize. We'll just have to put it down as a bad case of nerves. KU's chances for a bowl bid, it is pretty generally agreed, went out the window with the loss Saturday. However, from some points of view may this isn't so bad. It probably sounds like sour grapes, but now that there is little chance of Gil Reich and Charlie Hoag playing in a Bowl game, they will be ready for the basketball season much sooner. -KU- KU basketball will go back to its former style of scrappy, fast-moving play this year, since the loss of big Cumulous Clyde Lovellette means that the team will be composed of a lot of fast players who can hit from anywhere. After last year's basketball season anything the team does this year will be anticlimactic. There is no reason to expect that the team will drop straight to the Big Seven cellar. Kansas' cage squad, although it looked a little sluggish Friday night as a result of the lack of practice, should keep its head well above water during the season. We see no reason why the Jayhawks shouldn't be well up in the conference. urdy between halves of the Kansas-Oklahoma A&M football game. Six conference schools will enter team with a total of 30 men running. The race will finish in front of the student section of the stadium. The order of finish: 1. Santee, KU; 2. Dalzell, KU; 3. Drummond, OU; 4. Keith Palmquist, KU; 5. Lloyd Koby, KU; 6. Warren Rouse, OU; 7. Dick Wilson, KU; 8. Ronald Reed, OU; 9. George Gilmour, OU; 10. Derald Smith, OU. Time: 15.02.5. Friday's IM Games See End of Round 5 In Friday's Intramural football Alpha Kappa Lambda defeated Alpha Phi Alpha, 2-0: Sigma Alpha Epsilon beat Kappa Alpha Psi, 16-0; Phi Gamma Delta edged Beta Theta Pi, 8-2, and Jolliffe hall beat Stephenson hall, 1-0, in an overtime game, to close out the fifth round of men's Intramural football. 901 Mass. New Preparation Livens Dry Hair BY GRACE BARBER Free Press Beauty Writer Extremely dry hair with split or broken ends is now the number one hair problem. For women with this problem, there is a new product for dry hair, bleached hair, abused hair. It's a pleasure to pass along news about such a quick and easy corrective dry hair treatment cream, planned to meet this need. The packaging is unusual. The cream is put up for individual treatments in pretty decorated tintail packs measuring about two and a quarter inches by four and one quarter inches. This individual treatment packaging assures that the preparation is completely sanitary and the correct quantity is used. . . . AFTER SHAMPOO and thorough rinse and while hair is still moist but not dripping wet, massage contents of one envelope thoroughly into the hair and scalp. Then cover with waxed paper or shower cap and wrap with a towel. Leave on for 30 minutes or longer if possible. Rinse out the cream with warm water. The cream is water soluble so the only part that will remain is that which has been absorbed by the hair. No shampoo or special after-rinse is necessary One can expect improvement in hair texture after only one treatment, because the cream leaves the hair more mustrous and easier to manage and loose, frayed, strawlike ends lose their annoying brittleness. The worse the hair the more startling the effect. This wonderful new Bonne Bell product is known as Final Touch Dry Hair Treatment. It can be used right after bleaching. However, Final Touch should be used before tinting or dyeing. As for cost - six individual treatments come in a box that sells for $2 plus tax. (Reprinted by permission of the Detroit Free Press) Weaver's Cosmetics_Main Floor